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Comment by rogerrogerr

5 months ago

As super low hanging fruit:

June 8, 2020: WHO: Data suggests it's "very rare" for coronavirus to spread through asymptomatics [0]

June 9, 2020: WHO expert backtracks after saying asymptomatic transmission 'very rare' [1]

0: https://www.axios.com/2020/06/08/who-coronavirus-asymptomati... 1: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jun/09/who-expert-bac...

Of course, if we just take the most recent thing they said as "revised guidance", I guess it's impossible for them to contradict themselves. Just rapidly re-re-re-revised guidance.

The difference between a contradiction and a revision is the difference between parallel and serial.

I'm not aware that the WHO ever claimed simultaneously contradictory things.

Obviously, rapid revisions during a period of emerging data makes YouTube's policy hard to enforce fairly. Do you remove things that were in line with the WHO when they were published? When they were made? Etc

  • You’re removing people who were correct before the WHO revised their position.

    • Were they correct because they studied the data or because it just happened that their propaganda for once aligned with the truth?

      A broken clock says the right time twice a day, that doesn’t mean much.

      ps: I don’t support the bans but you argument seems flawed to me.

  • A censorship policy that changes daily is a shitty policy. If people on June 8th criticized that official position before they reversed the next day, do you think it was right or a good idea for them to be censored?

    • That's a nice hypothetical. Do you have any examples of people getting censored for WHO changing their stance?

      Like, we're getting pretty nuanced here pretty fast, it would be nice to discuss this against an actual example of how this was enforced rather than being upset about a hypothetical situation where we have no idea how it was enforced.

    • > A censorship policy that changes daily is a shitty policy.

      Yes.

      > If people on June 8th criticized that official position before they reversed the next day, do you think it was right or a good idea for them to be censored?

      Obviously not. Like I pointed out to the other commenter, if you were to read the comment of mine you replied to, I have a whole paragraph discussing that. Not sure why you're asking again.

      2 replies →

    • There's only two ways one could have been contradicting information from the WHO which was later revised prior to them revising it. Either:

      1. They really did have some insight or insider knowledge which the WHO missed and they spoke out in contradiction of officialdom in a nuanced and coherent way that we can all judge for ourselves.

      2. They in fact had no idea what they were talking about at the time, still don't, and lucked into some of it being correct later on.

      I refer to Harry Frankfurt's famous essay "On Bullshit". His thesis is that bullshit is neither a lie nor the truth but something different. Its an indifference to the factuality of ones statements altogether. A bullshit statement is one that is designed to "sound right" for the context it is used, but is actually just "the right thing to say" to convince people and/or win something irrespective of if it is true or false.

      A bullshit statement is more dangerous than a lie, because the truth coming to light doesn't always expose a bullshitter the way it always exposes a lie. A lie is always false in some way, but bullshit is uncorrelated with truth and can often turn out right. Indeed a bullshitter can get a lucky streak and persist a very long time before anyone notices they are just acting confident about things they don't actually know.

      So in response.

      It is still a good idea to censor the people in category two. Even if the hypothetical person in your example turned out to get something right that the WHO initially got wrong, they were still spreading false information in the sense that they didn't actually know the WHO was wrong at the time when they said it. They were bullshitting. Having a bunch of people spreading a message of "the opposite of what public health officials tell you" is still dangerous and bad, even if sometimes in retrospect that advice turns out good.

      People in category one were few and far between and rarely if ever censored.

      3 replies →

  • They were producing contradictory messages about mere masks: man-made objects we've had in their present form for decades and in some form for centuries, if not millennia.

    It's 2020 and suddenly we need research about how well masks work, if at all and what is their exact benefit.

  • > The difference between a contradiction and a revision is the difference between parallel and serial.

    Eh, ya kind of, but it seems more like the distinction between parallel and concurrent in this case. She doesn't appear to be wrong in that instance while at the same time the models might have indicated otherwise, being an apparent contradiction and apparently both true within the real scope of what could be said about it at that time.

  • They would not utter the word Taiwan. That’s an huge red flag that they are captured and corrupt. Are you claiming this has changed?

    • Did you reply to the wrong comment? We're discussing whether the WHO put out simultaneously contradictory information. Whether the WHO's politics matches your preferred politics for southeast Asia doesn't seem topical?

      1 reply →

  • > I'm not aware that the WHO ever claimed simultaneously contradictory things.

    Whether they did or not is almost irrelevant: information doesn't reach humans instantaneously, it takes time to propagate through channels with varying latency, it gets amplified/muted depending on media bias, people generally have things going on in life other than staying glued to new sources, etc.

    If you take a cross sample you're guaranteed to observe contradictory "parallel" information even if the source is serially consistent.

OK and if you said something that you later realised to be wrong, would you be contradicting yourself by correcting it? What should they have done in this situation? People do make mistakes, speak out of turn, say the wrong thing sometimes; I don't think we should criticise someone in that position who subsequently fixes their error. And within a couple of days in this case! That's a good thing. They screwed up and then fixed it. What am I missing here?

  • When you're a global organization who is pushing for the censorship of any dissent or questioning of your proclamations, it's really on you not to say one thing one day then the opposite the next day, isn't it? They could have taken some care to make sure their data and analysis was sound before making these kinds of statements.

    If you posted to YouTube that it is very rare for asymptomatics to spread the disease, would you be banned? What if you posted it on the 9th in the hours between checking their latest guidance and their guidance changing? What if you posted it on the 8th but failed to remove it by the 10th?

    What if you disagreed with their guidance they gave on the 8th and posted something explaining your stance? Would you still get banned if your heresy went unnoticed by YouTube's censors until the 10th at which time it now aligns with WHO's new position? Banned not for spreading misinformation, but for daring to question the secular high priests?

    • Good lord, refer to my original comment. The person I was replying to claimed the WHO contradicted themselves, I asserted that they did not. All the rest of this is your own addition.

      1 reply →

    • Did the WHO push for censorship or was it YouTube/Google/others?

      It was a novel time and things were changing daily. Care needs to be taken yes, but it’s also weighed against clear and open communication. People were very scared. Thinking they would die. I don’t mind having up-to-date information even if it were changing daily.

      2 replies →

  • Them correcting themselves isn't a bad thing. The point is that it would be absolutely retarded to require that people never disagree with the WHO. Please try and follow the thread of the conversation and not take it down these pointless tangents.

    • No, the point (and my original reply) is that correcting themselves is not the same as contradicting themselves. I didn't say anything about never disagreeing with them, and it's not a tangent, I'm replying to replies to my original comment.

      1 reply →

they also changed the symptoms definitions, so ...

  • So as researchers learned more about COVID the WHO should've just ignored any new findings and stuck to their initial guidance? This is absurd.

    • no and that was my point. parent connect was stuck on one change and ignoring the other, when it makes perfect sense when you see all changes